Scott v. Crider

272 S.W. 1010, 217 Mo. App. 1, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 1
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 272 S.W. 1010 (Scott v. Crider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott v. Crider, 272 S.W. 1010, 217 Mo. App. 1, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 1 (Mo. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

*7 BECKER, J.

Appellants here filed a. motion in the circuit court to be made parties defendant in the. case and to set aside a certain judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff and against the estate of Marcella Emerson, defendant. Said motion was overruled and in due course the movants appeal.

There is no real controversy so far as the facts involved in the case are concerned. One Marcella Emerson, a resident of St. Charles County, Missouri, an unmarried woman, died intestate on March 31, 1919. She left an estate valued at approximately $30,000, and left surviving as her heirs at law three sisters of the whole blood, the children of one deceased sister of the whole blood, and the descendants of three deceased sisters of the half blood. Mrs. Antoinette Crider, one of her surviving sisters and heirs at law, qualified as administratrix of her estate.

On November 10, 1919, Lizzie Crider, a niece of the deceased, Marcella Emerson, and a daughter of the administratrix, Antoinette Crider,, upon due notice given, filed and presented for allowance against said estate a demand based upon a note of the said Marcella Emerson, for the sum of $7000, and on the same day Leo P. Scott, a nephew of the decedent and of the administratrix, *8 also filed and presented for allowance against said estate a demand for $5000 based upon a note of the said Marcella Emerson.

The said note to lizzie Crider was in words and figures as follows:

“$7000 O’Fallon, Mo. March 27th, 1919.

“Fifteen days after date I promise to pay to Lizzie Crider seven thousand dollars for value received negotiable and payable without defalcation or discount and with interest from date at the rate of 4 per cent per annum. In case I recover from this illness this note is void. '

“M. Emerson.”

The Scott note was identical except that it was for $5000 and was payable to Leo P. Scott.

On March 15,1920, said Leo P. Scott filed suit in the circuit court of St. Charles county against the estate of said Marcella Emerson for $15,000 for services alleged to have been rendered deceased by him for over a period of more than eighteen years.

The claim of said Lizzie Crider against said Marcella Emerson’s estate was allowed for the full amount of the note and interest, aggregating $7560. The administratrix promptly appealed from the judgment of the probate court to the circuit court.

The demand of Leo P. Scott was tried in the probate court and resulted in a hung jury, and thereafter, on stipulation, a judgment was entered in the probate court in favor of the estate and the cause appealed to the circuit court. Early in 1923 the appeals of both the Scott and Crider claims were pending in the circuit court as well as Scott’s suit for $15,000 for personal service rendered the deceased during her lifetime. Then it was that negotiations were begun in an endeavor to effect an adjustment of these several suits. These negotiations resulted in tentative agreements to the effect that the plaintiff, Lizzie Crider, should take judgment against the estate for $3250 in full settlement of her demand, and *9 that the claimant Leo P. Scott should take judgment against the estate for $3500 in full settlement of all his demands. These compromise agreements were made subject to the approval of the probate court of St. Charles county, in which the administration of the estate was pending.

The said probate court, after due deliberation, concluded that such a compromise adjustment of the several suits would be to the interest and advantage of the estate, and entered its order approving the compromise and directed the administratrix to carry out said compromise, and thereupon the circuit court, on June 11, 1923, entered judgment in conformity therewith. By this compromise adjustment the administratrix, with the approval of the probate court, obtained a settlement of litigated claims amounting to $27,000 for $6750.

On August 9, 1923, nearly two months after these compromise judgments had been entered Annie Creech, Kate Creech, Effie Creech, Euth Day and Mrs. George Wilkinson (appellants here) filed motions in the circuit court to be made parties defendants in the case and to set aside the said compromise judgments theretofore entered in. favor of the plaintiff, Lizzie Crider, for $3250, and in favor of Leo P. Scott for $3500. . However no copy of said motions or notice of the filing of the same, were ever served upon either Lizzie Crider or Leo P. Scott.

The movants ’ said motions, praying to be made parties defendants and to set aside the judgments entered on stipulation, alleged that each of the compromise judgments had been entered without consent of the movants who were entitled to three-elevenths in and to the estate, and that the administratrix had a perfect defense to each and every claim made by the said Scott and Lizzie Crider, and that the “said compromise and adjustment heretofore filed in this cause and upon which the judgment sought to be set aside in this cause is bottomed, is fraudulent and void and was entered into in opposition to these petitioners’ rights and demands,”

*10 A reading of the record before us discloses that no testimony was adduced on hearing of said motions which tended to support the allegations therein, that the compromise had been effected by fraud. Furthermore the uncontradicted testimony tends to show that both Lizzie Crider and Leo P. Scott had for many years prior to the death of the said Marcella Emerson performed services for her, at her request, for which services no payment had been made or remuneration attempted by the said Marcella Emerson excepting the giving of the notes in question by her during her last illness to the said Lizzie Crider. and Leo P. Scott'. The testimony further discloses that at the time Marcella Emerson executed the said notes to her nephew and niece she told them that if she recovered from her sickness she wanted the notes returned to her and she would make other arrangements in regard to compensating each of them for the services which they had rendered her, and that it was in conformity with that request that the words, “in case I recover from this sickness, this note is void,” was inserted in each of the notes.

We are met at the outset with the contention that there is nothing before this court to review in that the appeal herein was not taken from the final judgment in the case but from the trial court’s order overruling movants’ motion to set aside that judgment. The point is without merit.

Our Supreme Court has discussed this question most fully in the cases of Norton v. Reed, 281 Mo. 482, 221 S. W. 6, and Scott v. Rees, 300 Mo. 123, 253 S. W. 998, and has clearly demonstrated therein that the action or order of a trial court on a motion to vacate a judgment, whether for irregularity on the face of or dehors the record, is the same, and in each case is a final judgment from which an appeal or writ of error will lie.

Whether an executor or administrator has the power to permit a compromise judgment to be entered against the estate has not been directly decided in this State. *11

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Bluebook (online)
272 S.W. 1010, 217 Mo. App. 1, 1925 Mo. App. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-crider-moctapp-1925.